| John George Phillimore - Contraband of war - 1861 - 36 pages
...destroy these possessions and that communication ; and it is a legal act of hostility to do so. But the neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy ; and you are not at liberty to conclude that any communication between them can partake, in... | |
| Henry Wager Halleck - International law - 1861 - 960 pages
...ground a very material distinction arises, with respect to the right of furnishing the conveyance. The neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and you are not at liberty to conclude that any communication between them can partake, in any... | |
| Richard Holt Hutton, Walter Bagehot - 1862 - 544 pages
...perhaps the first existing, authority on the subject, " is that the neutral preserves its integrity." " The neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and it does not necessarily follow that the communications are of a hostile nature." We are... | |
| Philip Anstie Smith - Civil rights - 1862 - 56 pages
...neutral ships, carrying the enemy's despatches, from his colonies to the mother country. ***** But the neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and you "are not at liberty to conclude, that any communication between them can partake, in... | |
| Henry William Lord - Search, Right of - 1862 - 70 pages
...Rob. Rep. 43*. ' 6 Roh. Rep. 466-7. application that the introduction of them requires no apology. " The neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and you are not at liberty to conclude that any communication between them can partake in any... | |
| Law - 1862 - 720 pages
...belligerent country are in a different position from the kind of despatches which we have above considered. ' The neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and you are not at liberty to conclude that any communication between them can partake in any... | |
| Charles Clark - Neutrality - 1862 - 56 pages
...destroy these possessions and that communication, and it is a legal act of hostility so to do ; but the neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and you are not at liberty to conclude that any communication between them can partake, in any... | |
| Lyttleton Forbes Winslow - Forensic psychiatry - 1863 - 788 pages
...destroy these possessions and that communication, and it is a legal act of hostility so to do ; but the neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and you are not at liberty to conclude, that any communication between them can partake, in... | |
| James Kent - International law - 1866 - 530 pages
...neutral country to his own sovereign. The effect of the former despatches is presumed to be hostile; but the neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and it does not necessarily follow that the communications are of a hostile nature. Ambassadors... | |
| John C. Devereux - Law - 1868 - 444 pages
...his own sovereign f— 152, 153. The effect of the former dispatches is presumed to be hostile J but the neutral country has a right to preserve its relations with the enemy, and it does not necessarily follow that communications of the latter sort are of a hostile nature.... | |
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